LONDON (Reuters) - A Francis Bacon
small-format triptych of his lover George Dyer made what Sotheby's
called a "landmark" price of 26.7 million pounds ($45.4 million) on
Monday in a contemporary art sale that surpassed estimates and set
records for some artists.

The Bacon, a 1967 work which Sotheby's said was one of about
40 such triptychs that the artist painted in a format of 11 by
14 inches for each of the three frames, was the star of the show
for a packed auction in London that netted a total of 93.15
million pounds.

Even with eight of 59 lots unsold, the total topped the
pre-auction top-end estimate of 89 million pounds.

The previous top price for a similar Bacon triptych was 23
million pounds, Sotheby's said, while the highest price ever
paid for a work of art at auction was the sale by rival
Christie's of a large format Bacon triptych in New York last
November for just over $142 million.

"The Bacon was bought by collectors who truly wanted to own it.
It was a completely private market that came from virtually
every side of the world and people wanted to own this wonderful
piece and they bought it."

Westphal declined to identify the geographic region of the
winning buyer but noted that the losing bidder in the tense
10-minute-long battle in which the price for the Bacon soared
well above the 20-million-pound top guide price had been handled
by Patti Wong, Sotheby's chairman in Asia.

The sales event set an auction record price of 8.5 million pounds
for Scottish artist Peter Doig for his "Country-rock (wing mirror)
of 1999", though this was slightly below the "in the region of 9
million pounds" that Sotheby's had guided for the enormous oil
painting.

There also were some surprise prices for works by younger artists,
among them Romanian Adrian Ghenie's "The Fake Rothko". It went for
1.43 million pounds, or roughly four times its top guide price and
six times the highest price previously paid for the artist at
auction.

A real Mark Rothko "No. 10" from 1949 also sold for much more than
the top guide price of 800,000 pounds, going instead for more than
2.5 million pounds.

Other major works sold at the night auction of the two-day event
that continues with a day auction on Tuesday included an Andy Warhol
"Nine Multicolored Marilyns" that went for 4.6 million pounds, a
Bacon "Study for Portrait of P.L." that sold for just under 4.5
million pounds and a Warhol "Dollar Sign (Yellow)" which went for 4
million pounds.